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Chapter 11: George Thompson, M. P.—1851.
Thompson renews his old triumphs in the Eastern and Middle States, and takeous indispositions which now and again, throughout the year 1851, drove the editor of the Liberator from his post to a sick ave enjoyed the Soiree, wrote Wendell Phillips
Ms. Mar. 9, 1851. to Elizabeth Pease:
perfectly extempore—so much so thaf Shadrach was one of four which, preeminently, in the year 1851, revealed to the North the real meaning of the Fugitive Sla as was first made clear when, on February
Lib. 21.30. 15, 1851, pending a postponement of Shadrach's case before CommissioDeficiency Bill by the Senate of the 31st Congress (session 1851-52) for Judicial Expenses was ascribed to the execution of y are earnestly active for, its enforcement.
The Boston of 1851 is not the Boston of 1775.
Boston has now become a mere shesidue of it will come out on Monday.
Perhaps you
Dec. 8, 1851. will think that I go too far in enjoining it upon all men

ermined the Free Soil Party by indefinite postponement of the issue of slavery extension.
As the New York Tribune said in 1851, from the point of view of Henry Clay: There being no longer any immediate danger of the extension of slavery, the feelingdies' A. S. Society (Dublin: Webb & Chapman, 1852).
A year before, Mr. McKim, in writing to Mr. Garrison
Ms. Oct. 25, 1851. on another topic, asked if the rumor were true that he believed in the spiritual origin of the so-called Rochester knockiP. Rogers, who died in 1846.
He first
Oct. 16. heard of this from William C. Nell, a colored Bostonian
Ms. Sept. 15-17, 1851. temporarily assisting Frederick Douglass with his paper.
He reprinted it in May, 1852, from Friend Post's Voices
Lib. , 1851, sent another message of reconciliation through
Ms. Oliver Johnson by a boy medium near Waterloo, N. Y.,
Nov. (?) 1851. O. Johnson to W. L. G. and who became from that time truly a familiar spirit to Mr. Garrison—sometimes notably, and so co

nd consented to take part in the proceedings.
He shared the hospitality of the Davises with H. C. Wright, Parker
Lib. 23.95. Pillsbury, and Joseph Barker, the last-named being chosen to preside over the Convention.
Barker had apparently taken permanent leave of his native England, having purchased a farm in Ohio and removed thither with his
Lib. 23.11. family.
On his preliminary visit to this country he had received from Mr. Garrison in Boston attentions like those
Ms. Albany, Apr. 19, 1851. he had bestowed in England.
Once settled, he identified himself with the abolitionists, writing copiously for the
J. Barker to W. L. G.; ante, p. 174. Liberator, and finding there admission (which Edmund Quincy denied to it in the Liberty Bell) for an article
Lib. 22.80; Ms. Jan. 13, 1853, E. Quincy to R. D. Webb. showing that; since the Bible sanctioned slavery, the book must be demolished as a condition precedent to emancipation.
In November, 1852, he had been prime mover in a Bible Co

tic forebodings had a solid substratum in the signs of the times.
Never was the Slave Power more insolent in its consciousness of strength, or wilder in its delirium of empire.
See, for the undisguised purpose of President Pierce's Administration to annex Cuba, Lib. 24: 85, 127, 130, 189, 194; and, for the ancillary intrigue to acquire Samana Bay in San Domingo—a menace also to the independence and liberty of Hayti— Lib. 24: 157, 159; 25: 1, 61. Lieut. Herndon's exploration of the Amazon in 1851, by direction of the Navy Department, had distinct reference to a pro-slavery colonization with an ultimate view to annexation (Lib. 24: 62). On the other hand, see the numerous expressions of the Southern press looking to a restoration of the slave trade (Lib. 24: 149, 173), and in particular Henry A. Wise's letter to the Rev. Nehemiah Adams, D. D. (Lib. 24: 150). I would, said the Virginian, recommend the repeal of every act to suppress the slave trade.
In November, 1856, the Governor of S

tirely convince my mind of the inexpediency of a change.
1. It is too late, as Mr. Robinson has been already authorized
Marius R. Robinson. by me to engage a hall in Cleveland.
2. Cleveland and the West have been freely spoken of as the locality by the Standard and other papers.
3. The Ohio friends are stronger and stronger for Cleveland, as time advances; especially Robinson and Brooke.
Samuel Brooke.
4. Bradburn, who at first dissuaded us from Cleveland, now advises it;
In 1851, George Bradburn, who, after giving up the Lynn Pioneer, had been associated with Elizur Wright on the Boston Chronotype, removed to Cleveland, Ohio, and became one of the editors of the True Democrat (afterwards the Leader). He had greatly impaired his health by taking the stump for Fremont (Life of Bradburn, pp. 229, 233). and Mr. Tilden, M. C.,
Daniel R. Tilden, a native of Connecticut, Representative in Congress of Ohio, 1843-47.
See in Sanborn's Life of John Brown, p. 609, Brown's l